We had a Christmas in July party today so I'll have to pick out what we found in the week. I had a job on at Karweyderskraal and although I didn't have time to stop under the Eskom powerlines for the Protea compacta, Bot River Protea, which are at their very best at the moment, there were interesting flowers in the farm-yard.
We are used to the white Metalasia here, so a pink one was a novelty: M. erubescens?
Near it in the yard was a Lobelia, also different from the ones we know here. To the right behind is a white Erica:
This bush with yellow flowers caught my eye, possibly with a pea-type flower.
The triangle at the turn-off to our Country Club is looking impressive at the moment. These Proteas are a bit hidden behind the billboards:
A distinctly paler one near them:
Leucadendron with yellow flowers, L. laureolum?:
And the red one! Leucadendron 'Safari Sunset'. This one obscures the signboards and has to be cut back every year, but it seems to thrive on it!
It was too wet to do our 67 minutes for Mandela at Max Harris Park yesterday but I popped in to see what was in flower. The Japanese Flowering Quince Chaenomeles speciosa started flowering a couple of weeks ago. It was severely cut back at our first Gardening Day, so it should be fuller than it is. Nevertheless it is striking with its deep pink blossoms and no leaves:
There is a single pink bloom on the otherwise white Camellia:
If you ignore the rubbish and tangled fencing under them, the Aloe arborescens are stunning. The NGK spire is having a face-lift. They're wasting their time looking for eggs under the cock!
This bush has looked familiar all along; now that its colours are coming through, it looks like a Fiddlewood Citharexylum quadrangulare. The word 'guitar' can be picked out in the Greek!
There are still lots of Proteas to come, with several buds like this:
Is this a Blue Daisy, Blue Marguerite or Felicia amelloides?
So easily overlooked are the Crassula ovata or Jade Plant flowers! The leaves of this one are riddled with holes and it looks quite scruffy, but up close the flowers are exquisite!
We did go for a short walk yesterday. I took this picture of a white Metalasia to compare the foliage with the pink one. This one certainly has the 'axial tufts' referred to in some of the guides. The M. erubescens above (if that's what it is) has plainer leaves, more like a rosemary plant.
Here is an Erica we're not familiar with, we found several in one patch only:
Here's that plant with the red flowers again!
Amongst it and nearby is a tough-growing plant with almost Cedrus-type leaves, now covered in round white flowers:
In the middle of the road, right on the track was this unusual tiny plant. Felled trees had been dragged across the road on both sides of it, could it be something special?
The Retios are numerous, impressive and complicated. At first they all look the same, until you look up close. The flowers particularly are beautiful if you study them closely, each one very different! Anina has kindly identified the three specimens in the photos below: 'This one is a Hypodiscus aristatus male flower'.
Anina says of this below: 'Possibly another Hypodiscus aristatus male, but a younger flower. The female flowers are similar, but usually only a single inflorescence. (Yes, these are a whole inflorescence with lots of little flowers hidden by the spine bracts) and slimmer'.
Again, thanks to Anina, 'Thamnochortus lucens male.'
The much-hacked Buchu, Agathosma betulina has come back with a bang! We have to be careful where we stand near it, for its numerous babies! Two can be seen coming up at the bottom of the picture.
On the way home we found the remains of a Bolete (?) with scaffolding!
And close by, some impressive orange Cinnabar brackets, Pycnoporus spp?
On the subject of fungi, on the driveway at home we have been watching this Fairy Circle:
The bare ring is where they were growing and the grass in the middle was mown at the same time as the rest around but has grown vigorously in comparison with that on the outside of the ring!
:-) A
No comments:
Post a Comment